In all honesty I had hoped for a slightly more spectacular and exciting kickoff of the third season of the phenomenal TV-series "The Twilight Zone"; - especially since the installment features none other than Charles Bronson (although, admittedly, long before he became an action movie item) in an army costume! Instead, "Two" is a minimalistic post-apocalyptic tale entirely thriving on atmosphere, performances and though-provoking underlying themes. Charles Bronson is great, but Elizabeth Montgomery is possibly even more stunning; - and that without saying a single word. Charlie and Liz are both survivors of what clearly must have been an all-devastating nuclear war. When they run in to each other, in a completely extinct little town, their uniforms and lack of communication ability reminds them that they were once fighting for opposite sites. But since they inherited practically the whole planet, should they still be enemies? "Two" is a dystopian Adam & Eve, and it's a profoundly intelligent and moralizing episode, but to be quite honest that's not necessarily what I search for in "The Twilight Zone". I appreciate it greatly, particularly for the great work of Bronson and Montgomery, but I prefer my favorite show when it's surreal and uncanny.